2011
DOI: 10.1038/hdy.2010.154
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The effects of age and environment on the expression of inbreeding depression in Eucalyptus globulus

Abstract: Inbreeding adversely affects fitness traits in many plant and animal species, and the magnitude, stability and genetic basis of inbreeding depression (ID) will have short-and longterm evolutionary consequences. The effects of four degrees of inbreeding (selfing, f ¼ 50%; full-and half-sib matings, f ¼ 25 and 12.5%; and unrelated outcrosses, f ¼ 0%) on survival and growth of an island population of Eucalyptus globulus were studied at two sites for over 14 years. For selfs, ID in survival increased over time, re… Show more

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Cited by 36 publications
(32 citation statements)
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“…Eucalypts are preferentially outcrossing with late-acting post-zygotic selfincompatibility resulting in outcrossing rates that can exceed 90% 1 , high levels of nucleotide variation 23,24 and accumulation of genetic load and expression of inbreeding depression 4 . A microsatellite survey of BRASUZ1 and its inbred siblings indicated putative hotspots of genetic load (Supplementary Information section 4).…”
Section: Genetic Load and Heterozygositymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Eucalypts are preferentially outcrossing with late-acting post-zygotic selfincompatibility resulting in outcrossing rates that can exceed 90% 1 , high levels of nucleotide variation 23,24 and accumulation of genetic load and expression of inbreeding depression 4 . A microsatellite survey of BRASUZ1 and its inbred siblings indicated putative hotspots of genetic load (Supplementary Information section 4).…”
Section: Genetic Load and Heterozygositymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…E. aggregata, Field et al 2008). Inbreeding in the form of self-fertilisation (selfing) or mating between close relatives (biparental inbreeding), is known to result in inbreeding depression in eucalypts, impairing fitness and compromising genetic quality of seed collections, as it can result in both short-and long-term detriments to growth and survival (Eldridge and Griffin 1983;Potts and Wiltshire 1997;Costa e Silva et al 2011). However, despite a high potential for inbreeding in small and rare populations, outcrossing rates are generally high in eucalypt seed cohorts (Byrne 2008) due to efficient postzygotic selection mechanisms against inbreeding within the seed capsule (James and Kennington 1993), resulting in seed abortion and thus smaller seed crops that maintain high overall outcrossing rates (Kennington and James 1997b;Krauss et al 2007).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Knowledge is particularly lacking on the frequency of QTL alleles and distribution of effects in natural and breeding populations. Finally, long generation times and high rates of inbreeding depression in outbred eucalypt species (Costa e Silva et al 2011;Griffin and Cotterill 1988) have precluded the development of inbred lines with contrasting alleles, which are needed to isolate and characterize (Mendelize) individual allele effects.…”
Section: Next-generation Sequencing Resourcesmentioning
confidence: 99%